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FREE Trial Version TurboXML IDE & Schema Editor
FREE NeoCore XMS Native XML DatabasePersonal Edition
100,000 copies in print
ADOBE FrameMaker + SGML-FREE TRYOUT
The proven resource for the Semantic Web and Web Services100,000 copies in six languages!
Developers, managers, consultants, and VCs rely on its technical accuracy, accessible writing style, and broad and deep coverage.
Learn XMLStart by learning what XML is, why it came to be, how it differs from HTML, and the handful of vital concepts that you must understand to apply XML quickly and successfullyin your business and in your code.
Use XMLExperience XML through illustrated discussions of tools and applications: Web services, B2B, B2C, EDI, exchanges, e-commerce, integration, portals, content management, databases, conversion, syndication, telephony, wireless, customization, publication, presentation.
Master XMLMaster the details from friendly, in-depth presentations: XML, schemas, DTDs, datatypes, XSLT, XSL-FO, XLink, XPath, XPointer, XSDL, namespaces, topic maps, RDF, SOAP, UDDI, WSDL, VoiceXML.
"This book is an excellent starting point where you can learn and experiment with XML. As the inventor of SGML, Dr. Charles F. Goldfarb is one of the most respected authorities on structured information." From the Foreword by Jean Paoli,2 CD-ROMs: 175 no-time-limit FREE packages
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Full-spectrum Applications of XML,
By Xiaofan LIN (San Jose, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Charles F. Goldfarb's XML Handbook (4th Edition) (Paperback)
In this book you can find almost any applications of XML, including the latest development of Web services and VoiceXML.It's especially for students who want to look for a project/thesis topic on XML or CTOs who wish to understand the business various scenarios where XML can be applied. Admittedly, with 69 chapters in about 1100 pages, this book cannot have too much depth. Don't expect to use it as a daily programming reference book. It's more like a jump board that can set you in a specific direction of the XML world --- Then you should consult a more detailed book on that specific topic. It also introduces the various business software around XML. Besides, this book is very entertaining.
15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Unique resource, with issues,
By Jack D. Herrington "engineer and author" (Silicon Valley, CA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Charles F. Goldfarb's XML Handbook (5th Edition) (Charles F. Goldfarb Definitive XML Series) (Paperback)
The fifth edition of the XML Handbook is an interesting beast all in itself. It's huge. The size of no other 'handbook' I have ever read, weighing in at 1200 pages. My guess is that this book has grown from edition to edition and has become the beast we see now. Starting with the negative: * The organization of the book needs work. The chapters are in an * The organization of each chapter needs to be normalized into a format * The graphics are inconsistent at best. Some are horrible in quality. * The chapters are very short. There are 69 chapters in a 1200 page * The book is not self-referential. For example, the topic of vector All that being said, I am still giving the book a good rating because I Is it worth buying? Tough to say. I think for someone tasked with a What the book really needs is a thorough development editing pass to
19 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
More for managers than programmers,
By
This review is from: Charles F. Goldfarb's XML Handbook (4th Edition) (Paperback)
This book does have a wide array of topics, but no depth. There is a lot of history, which is to be expected from a guy who invented something like SGML. It's a big and heavy book with little practical material. Mostly academic, historical, and weak on details. Many chapters were not written by the authors listed on the front, but by vendors, and some of their material looks like marketing BS.In a few places it mentions specific tools, but most of it is hand-waving, "this stuff can do everything in the world" sort of material. The tutorials are very sketchy, and the chapters on how to do DTDs and schemas are incomplete. The basic information about XML itself isn't even covered until you've plowed through 760 pages. A lot of theory and almost no practice - and the practice there is, is so basic and incomplete that it's not worth the effort to read. The two CD's contain mostly 30-day trial shovelware you could download off the web for free - not the "175 genuinely free software packages" touted on the front cover. A lot of those "175 packages" are in fact just W3C specifications. It's the kind of book you want on your shelf if you want others to think you're technical. If you don't know anything about XML and need some technical knowledge, go ahead and get it. If you are a programmer or anyone looking for details on things like schemas, DTDs and syntax, look elsewhere. A more useful, more concise and much cheaper alternative would be CodeNotes for XML, by Gregory Brill.
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